Dayton Daily News

Deal for Freeman tops priority list for World Series champs

- By Paul Newberry

A celebratio­n 26 ATLANTA — years in the making was still going strong when a jarring dose of reality hit the Braves.

Has Freddie Freeman, the face of the franchise for the past decade, played his last game in an Atlanta uniform?

“Did I think I’d be sitting here with no contract? No I didn’t,” Freeman said after stopping by the Fox set during the postgame celebratio­n in Houston, not long after catching a throw to first for the final out. “This is a crazy game, a crazy business. But everyone knows where my heart is. And that’s the Atlanta Braves.”

Freeman’s future is the most pressing offseason issue facing the Braves, who capped an improbable run to their first World Series title since 1995 with a 7-0 rout of the Houston Astros in Game 6 on Tuesday night.

It’s hard to envision the Braves defending the title they worked so hard to achieve without No. 5 at first base.

The Braves had hoped to lock up the 32-year-old Freeman to a long-term deal before they got to the end of the season, but the two sides have yet to agree on terms.

“I’ve been here since I was 17 years old. Almost half my life, I’ve been in this organizati­on,” Freeman said. “It means everything to put on that Braves uniform every day. So hopefully I can continue to do that.”

Freeman’s uncertain status left the city with a bit of dread, even as it prepared for a Friday parade to toast Atlanta’s second championsh­ip in the four major American sports.

If Freeman re-signs, the Braves should be the favorites for a fifth straight NL East title and one of the top contenders for another Series championsh­ip.

Their most dynamic player, outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr., is expected to be fully recovered at some point during the first half of the 2022 season after going down in July with a season-ending knee injury.

Slugger Marcell Ozuna, who also missed most of the season after breaking his hand and then being arrested for allegedly attacking his wife during a domestic dispute, could return as well — most likely as a designated hitter if that rule, as expected, is adopted by both leagues.

Beyond Freeman, the rest of Atlanta’s dynamic infield — Ozzie Albies, Austin Riley and Dansby Swanson — is all locked up for next season. So are the top three starting pitchers — Charlie Morton, Max Fried and Ian Anderson — as well as the key figures in a bullpen that dominated the postseason: closer Will Smith and set-up men Tyler Matzek, A.J. Minter and Luke Jackson. Travis d’Arnaud will be back to catch them.

It’s a tight-knit group that the Braves would like to keep together as much as they can.

“Kind of the one thing that really sets us apart is how organicall­y it’s been created, the love and compassion for one another and the friendship­s,” Swanson said. “It’s very real.”

There will be some injuries to keep an eye on heading to spring training in February.

Acuna, of course, as well as Morton, a 14-game winner who sustained a broken leg in Game 1 of the World Series.

Not to mention Mike Soroka, the team’s former ace, still only 24 but now a huge question mark after tearing his Achilles tendon for a second time.

Sadly, the four outfielder­s who played such a key role in the Braves’ success after being acquired ahead of the trade deadline could all be headed elsewhere in 2022.

NL RBI leader Adam Duvall and pearl-wearing Joc Pederson both have mutual contract options for next season, while NL Championsh­ip series MVP Eddie Rosario and World Series MVP Jorge Soler are set to become free agents.

The Braves could make a pitch for one of them to return to play alongside Acuna, but there likely won’t be room in the budget for more than that.

Once the celebratio­n dies down, all eyes will turn to general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s, who missed the Series clincher after testing positive for COVID-19.

Anthopoulo­s pushed all the right buttons in the Braves’ run to the championsh­ip, and there’s every reason to believe he will assemble a roster capable of repeating in 2022.

The Braves don’t want to wait another 26 years for their next championsh­ip.

“Year after year, it never happened. This year it was improbable,” Freeman said. “We hit every pothole and somehow the car still made it onto the other side. It’s just an incredible group.”

Now the big question is: Will Freeman still be a part of it in 2022?

 ?? ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION ?? Freddie Freeman reacts after his
RBI double in the fifth inning of Game 6 on Tuesday. The Braves finished off the Astros in the World Series but now their best player, Freeman, finds himself without a contract.
ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION Freddie Freeman reacts after his RBI double in the fifth inning of Game 6 on Tuesday. The Braves finished off the Astros in the World Series but now their best player, Freeman, finds himself without a contract.

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